I would like to thank Netgalley and Severn House for an advance copy of Wildfire, the twenty-sixth novel to feature now retired Detective Superintendent Henry Christie.
Henry is involved in fire fighting co-ordination as wildfires sweep across his rural area of Lancashire and when one couple do not respond to his welfare calls he goes out to their house and discovers a grisly scene. In the meantime an old acquaintance, DC Diane Daniels, is dealing with a major crime spree in Lancaster. With resources limited Henry is brought out of retirement to team up with Diane to combat the spree of crime.
I thoroughly enjoyed Wildfire which is a tense, action packed thriller told at breakneck speed. I’m not quite sure where to start as the opening few chapters proper left me breathless with one daring event after another so probably at the beginning. The prologue, aptly entitled “the past”, covers certain events in one week in 2009 and sets up part of the present day narrative. I loved this introduction for the way it is written and what it says and how it says it. It is very sympathetic. Then it gets straight into what can only be a tsunami of serious, violent crimes. I have my doubts that anyone would undertake such a jaw dropping sequence of acts but, boy is it exciting, high octane and very readable. To be honest the wildfire in the title becomes background noise and slightly redundant in the crime wave that occurs although it is highly topical with the unfolding disaster in Australia.
The novel is told from various points of view, mostly Henry and Diane’s, and while it switches in chapter this is not as distracting as it might suggest. There are so many events that a bit of background from the criminal point of view fills in a few gaps and moves the plot forward.
I haven’t read many of the novels in this series but I’m not 100% on board with Henry Christie. He’s always ready to have a go, obviously enjoys the chase and is smart and strategic in this thinking but I always get the feeling that it’s on his terms and that he’s quite selfish in his outlook. Diane, on the other hand, is my new fictional heroine, smart, selfless and above all resourceful. I want to be her, cool under fire literally.
Wildfire is a good read that I have no hesitation in recommending.